Only Fiona’s image of the watermill at the wherhold passed muster.
Fiona kept her expression neutral, not wanting to further depress the weyrlings.
After that, sending images was added to their daily routine. Then one night, over a month after they’d started this routine, T’mar arose after dinner and announced, “Tomorrow the younger dragons will turn two.”
Fiona glanced excitedly at the younger weyrlings gathered at her table. She’d known it; she’d been counting down the days, hoping that perhaps they would start —
“Tomorrow, in the morning, we will start drilling on going
“You stay here,” Terin told Fiona acerbically after the fourth time she was awakened by the Weyrwoman’s tossing and turning. “If you go to Talenth, you’ll keep
As the younger girl grabbed spare blankets and hauled herself off, grumbling under her breath, to the queen’s lair, Fiona muttered an apology and tried to force herself to sleep . . . but it wasn’t possible.
She awoke with the very first noises of the morning, dressed quickly, and ran to the Kitchen Cavern.
T’mar arrived at his usual time and refused to be rushed, even though Fiona could feel the tension of the other weyrlings nearly overwhelm her own sense of excitement.
“If you all cannot calm down, we will try again tomorrow,” T’mar said after the werylings had groaned at seeing him pour a third cup of
Fiona willed herself to be calm, sending her eagerness into the very rock of the Weyr, forcing her breathing to slow, concentrating her loving thoughts on Talenth. Around her, she felt the other riders do the same.
“Better,” T’mar intoned, slowly raising his cup to his lips. Only Fiona saw how his brows twitched as he tried to keep from laughing.
“I’ll bet you were worse on your first day,” Fiona said accusingly.
“Another habit of a leader is to ensure that those who learn from her don’t have to repeat her mistakes,” T’mar observed drily. Fiona gave him a brittle look. The bronze rider was clearly enjoying himself, but she couldn’t argue with his dedication.
T’mar sent the older weyrlings out first. They flew off singly, winking out
“Break into groups of three,” T’mar ordered as the younger weyrlings gathered in front of him. Fiona aligned herself with F’jian, but T’mar shook his head at her, saying, “You’re your own group, Weyrwoman.”
The weyrlings smiled but, prudently, made no comment.
“We’ve twelve recognition points,” T’mar told them. “Twelve groups. We work round-robin.”
J’keran appeared suddenly over the Star Stones, and landed just as T’mar pointed toward him, saying, “J’keran at the Star Stones is your return point. You will jump to your recognition point and then back here to the Star Stones and land. Once you’ve landed, you’ll rotate to the next group until you’ve jumped to all of the recognition points.”
The weyrlings surged eagerly toward their dragons, but T’mar’s voice rose up. “You will jump one at a time. We will wait until we know that the jump was successful before another person goes
“Yes, wingleader!” Fiona and the thirty-two weyrling riders shouted back dutifully.
“Do you really understand?” T’mar asked again, lowering his voice dangerously.
“Yes, wingleader!” they shouted once more.
“Very well,” T’mar said. He glanced around, pointing at D’lanor.
“You will jump first,” he said.
D’lanor gulped, his eyes wide with sudden fright.
“J’gerd has your position.” T’mar paused. “What is your destination?”
D’lanor closed his eyes and repeated the drill of asking his Canoth to ask J’gerd’s Winurth for the image.
“It’s dark!” he said, opening his eyes in surprise. “I can’t see enough!”
“Yes, it is,” T’mar agreed, smiling at the distraught rider to assure him that he’d done well. “Try again.”
D’lanor closed his eyes once more. This time when he opened them, he was smiling. “The wherhold.”
T’mar nodded and paused, no doubt, Fiona guessed, checking with J’gerd, Winurth, Zirenth, and Canoth to confirm that D’lanor had good coordinates.
“Very well, mount your dragon, fly up to the Star Stones, and, when you get the signal, you may jump
Time seemed to stand still as Fiona and the other weyrlings watched D’lanor climb to his mount on Canoth, carefully check his straps, solemnly salute T’mar and Fiona, launch into the sky, and climb up toward the Star Stones.
Fiona didn’t know what the signal was and so was shocked when Canoth and D’lanor suddenly disappeared
She could hear her heart beating loudly, feel the blood pumping through her veins as she waited, breathless.
“There comes a time,” T’mar said softly in her ear, having sidled over to her unnoticed, “when you have to trust.”
Fiona glanced up at him bleakly, then nodded in understanding, forcing her lips straight, taking a deep breath and letting it out slowly.
She was just about to ask T’mar or Talenth if D’lanor had made it when suddenly there was a change above the Star Stones and D’lanor and Canoth burst out of
To the cheers of his weyrmates, an elated D’lanor glided back down to the Weyr Bowl.
T’mar pointed to the next group. “J’nos, you will go to V’lex.”
J’nos repeated the drill, discovering that V’lex was hovering over Plains Hold. Again, dragon and rider rose to their position by the Star Stones, again they disappeared
It seemed, as this was repeated over and over, that the fear and the thrill should lessen, that it should grow anticlimactic, but it didn’t.
“Weyrwoman,” T’mar said finally. She was the last to go. The others all looked at her expectantly. She looked to T’mar for instructions and he surprised her with, “Where do you want to go?”
Fiona’s eyes went wide. In her panic, she reached out to Talenth.
The calm in her mental touch was enough to reduce Fiona’s fright to something manageable.
“The wherhold,” Fiona replied. “I’d like to pay my respects to Lady Nuella while I’m there.”
“Very well,” T’mar agreed. “Who do you contact?”
“J’gerd,” Fiona replied instantly, sending the thought to Talenth. J’gerd’s image came back: the wherhold in the bright midday sun. “I have the image.”
Through his bronze dragon, T’mar checked with J’gerd, Winurth, and Talenth. “Very well, mount up — and good flying.”
As Fiona checked her straps in the growing morning light, she saw that Azeez, Mother Karina, and many of the young trader children had gathered to watch. Before she urged Talenth upward, she saluted T’mar and then, with a gracious wave of her arm, saluted the traders.
Very well, she would trust. She shifted the image in her mind, moved the sun to the far end of the sky and